And we are talking about logical priority here,… relation to that nonexistent book does not have any meaning.
Well God cannot have knowlege of an object that does not exist. Bear in mind here; that God being held to operate outside of time necessarily entails that what will occur has to him already occurred.
That is to say; if the book will be written at all; then God will know it; if the book is not written at all; then God will not know it; because it does not exist.
In regards to the operation of omniscience; temporality is accidental.
Of course the knowldge that you actually drink tea is contingent upon you drinking tea. And thus God’s knowledge is contingent.
Yes; but all knowingness is really distinct from the objects of knowlege; clearly. There is a greater than formal disunity in the operation of omniscience and the objects of knowlege; thus - the occurence of objects is accidental to the state of omniscience; although contained within.
Think of it this way;
If we reduce omniscience; by way of creating an analogy - to lets say the people elected presidents of the USA. If I have this “president-knowlege”, the
particular presidents elected would be irrelevant; accidental to the knowlege itself. I would have this “president-knowlege” if Obama won; or if Obama lost - his victory or failure is irrelevant to the state of my “president-knowlege”.
Likewise; omniscience is not effected by the objects of that knowlege. If an entity has omniscience it has that omniscience regardless of the outcomes of objects; which are accidental to it. My choice to drink tea instead of coffee does not alter or in any way make God’s omniscience contingent; it merely makes the
object of God’s omniscience (in this case; my preffered drink) contingent upon my action.
Now; when I have a drink later today; God will already know which one I will freely choose; yet his knowlege does not causally make me choose tea or coffee; I make that choice of my own volition. But; since God is operating outside of time then he knows what drink I will have. To God; the drink I later imbibe has happened; is happening and will happen. This event is already known to God; even though to us it has not occurred; and though our free choices allow us to determine the outcome of this event; it is both known by God; and not-influential over his omniscience.
It is clear that there is a distinction between all knowningness and the objects of knowlege; to dispute this is to make a fallacy of composition error; because all knowingness is not
merely a composite; it is a per se potency.
It is a logical error to say “well, there is God’s alleged omniscience” and leave it at that. Imagine someone (Mr. Smith) is rolling dice, one after the other, trillions of times every second, in a closed room. Someone else (Mr. Jones) writes down a set of numbers, also trillions of times every second. The two list turn out to be identical. If the rolling of the dice does not cause what Mr. Jones writes down, and the dice-rolls are not caused by what Mr. Jones wrote down, then what else is there than coincidence?
Their is either;
a) a coincidence
b) a formal unity
It is clear that it would be innacurate to state that it was a coincidence; as I have stated earlier. Therefore it appears that there is some formal unity between the events - namely; there is a less than causal unity underlying the event’s where the outcomes of one is identical to the outcome of another. Now; if we take 2+2 for example, me saying 2+2 and getting the answer 4 is identical to some other individual saying it; however - there is no causal unity between this per se; but there is a unity greater than a coincidence; hence there is a formal unity between the events; that the product of one correctly reflects the product of the other.
If there is an exact correspondence between two sets of events, and neither event causes the other, then we see a “coincidence” on a cosmic scale. You try to cut through this Gordian knot, by stipulating: “well, this is omniscience”?
I see that (rightly) there would be a contradiction entailed by saying it is a coincidence; now I may not off the top of my head be able to solve it apodeictically; for I am neither a genius nor a well educated person - but I feel compelled to try and resolve this contradiction using reason - because I am left with these three practical possibilities;
a) Omniscience is a contradiction in terms
b) Omniscience is a coincidental potency
c) Omniscience operates in a particular manner not yet fully known
As a matter of fact, …And this is where God’s simplicity comes into the pictute. If God’s knowledge is contingent, then God is contingent and that is all.
This is precisely why I rejected #2. It would contradict divine simplicity. The fact that most (Catholic) people would pick it is indicative of a lack of understanding of Catholic teaching.
And there is no way out of this problem. Your assertion, that “this is how omniscience operates” simply does not hold water.
Aren’t you also making a simple statement about how omniscience operates? It appears we are having some equivocal troubles here as our understandings of the term appear to be giving somewhat different conclusions.
For myself; omniscience is a potency which allows all objects to be known. From this it follows that the specific objects disposition exert no causal changes to the state of the active potency itself; merely to the objects per se.